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The colonial exports pattern, institutions and current economic performance

Tania El Kallab (Lebanese American University, Byblos, Lebanon)
Cristina Terra (ESSEC Business School and THEMA, Cergy, France)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 14 December 2020

Issue publication date: 29 October 2021

322

Abstract

Purpose

This paper explores the role of colonial heritage on long-term economic development from a resource-curse perspective. The authors investigate the impact of colonial exports on long-term economic development through two channels: (1) a direct impact of the economic dependency on natural resources and (2) an indirect impact via its effect on colonial institutions, which persisted over time and influenced current economic development.

Design/methodology/approach

To address this issue, the authors use an original data set on French bilateral trade from 1880 to 1912. The authors use partial least square structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) in the empirical analysis, so that the authors are able to construct latent variables (LVs) for variables that are not directly observable, such as the quality of institutions.

Findings

The authors find that exports of primary goods to France had a negative impact on colonial institutions and that for French colonies, this impact was driven by minerals exports. Despite its impact on colonial institutions, exports of French colonies had no significant indirect impact on their current institutions. The authors find no significant direct impact of colonial trade on current development for French colonies. Finally, colonial exports of manufactured products had no significant impact on colonial institutions among French colonies and a positive impact among non-French ones.

Research limitations/implications

Research implications regarding the findings of this paper are, namely, that the relative poor performance within French colonies today cannot be attributed to the extraction of raw materials a century ago. However, human capital and institutional development, instead of exports, are more relatively important for long-term growth. Some limitations in trying to determine the simultaneous relationship among colonial trade, institutions and economic performance are the relation between colonial trade and the extent of extraction from the colonizer, which is hard to quantify, as well as its precise mechanism.

Practical implications

Since the initial institutions set in those former colonies presented a strong persistence in the long run, their governments should focus now on building sound and inclusive political and economic institutions, as well as on investing in human capital in order to foster long-term growth. Once a comprehensive set of institutional and human resources are put in place, the quality and quantity of exports might create a positive spillover on the short-run growth.

Social implications

One social implication that can be retrieved from this study is the ever-lasting effect of both human capital investment and introduction of inclusive political and economic institutions on the long-run impact of growth.

Originality/value

The paper uses an original primary data set from archival sources to explore the role of colonial heritage on long-term economic development from a resource-curse perspective. It applies a relatively new model partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM) that allows the construction of LVs for variables that are not directly observable, as well as channeling the impact on growth through both direct and indirect channels. Finally, it allows for the simultaneous multigroup analysis across different colonial groups.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research has been conducted as part of the project Labex MME-DII (ANR11-LBX-0023-01).Lebanese American University and ESSEC Business SchoolESSEC Business School and THEMA: This research has been conducted as part of the project Labex MME-DII (ANR11-LBX-0023-01).

Citation

El Kallab, T. and Terra, C. (2021), "The colonial exports pattern, institutions and current economic performance", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 48 No. 8, pp. 1591-1623. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-06-2020-0266

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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